Before this commit, the docker daemon would recieve the filename of the
.pem files, which would be interpreted as the body and would fail. This
commit ensures that the actual body of the pem files are sent to the
daemon.
Change-type: patch
Connects-to: #562
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
This commit adds the ability to run a Docker build for an architecture
which is not the host architecture, using qemu-linux-user. Currently
this is only supported for linux.
Added:
* Installation of qemu which supports propagated execve flags
* Copying of qemu binary into the build context
* Transposing the given Dockerfile to use the qemu binary
* Intercepting of the build stream, so the output looks *almost* exactly
the same.
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
This gives the user enough notice to stay well updated, but won't spam
them if they're using resin-cli frequently.
Connects-to: #485
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
This commit will highlight the usage of the cache when doing a docker
build via `resin build`, which not only helps the user understand what
the build is doing, but also achieves more parity with the cloud
builder.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
If build is ran through `resin deploy`, then logs will be stored and
uploaded to the database, where the dashboard can display them
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
`resin build` had access to the `--nocache` and `--tag` options for
building with docker, but `resin deploy` did not. This commit adds the
options to the shared dockerUtils.appendOptions function.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
Upon changing the name of the source parameter from `context`, some
places weren't changed, this commit fixes that.
Change-type: patch
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>
Using `resin build` a user can now build an image on their own docker
daemon. The daemon can be accessed via a local socket, a remote host and
a remote host over a TLS socket. Project type resolution is supported.
Nocache and tagging of images is also supported.
Using `resin deploy` a user can now deploy an image to their fleet. The
image can either be built by `resin-cli`, plain Docker, or from a remote
source.
Change-type: minor
Signed-off-by: Cameron Diver <cameron@resin.io>